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Introductory Chemistry

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1 Introductory Chemistry
Chapter 2

2 Chemical Elements Fundamental unit in chemistry
Cannot be broken down by chemical means 112 elements total Use 1-2 letter symbols for each e.g. C= carbon, Na = sodium, Cl = chorine. 26 normally present in your body 4 major ones & 8 others significant (see table 2.1)

3 Atoms Lowest unit of an element Nucleus-protons (+), neutrons (0)
Surrounded by Electrons (-) Total charge is neutral- Protons # = electron # Proton number=atomic number- defines element

4 Ions, Molecules & Compounds
Atoms interact in characteristic ways Describing this is chemistry When two or more atoms are held together with chemical bonds the result is a molecule. Described by the molecular formula

5 Molecular Formula Example: O2 = oxygen the gas H2O = water
molecule has 2 atoms of oxygen bound together H2O = water Molecule has 2 atoms of H (hydrogen) and 1 atom of O (oxygen) Subscript = # of atoms of element Connected letters & numbers = molecule

6 Figure 2.3

7 Bonding attraction between atoms to form attachments = molecules
Electrons grouped into shells preferred number in outer shell leads to chemical activity Can be covalent, ionic, polar covalent and Hydrogen bonds

8 Ionic Bonds Can donate or accept electrons from another atom ->
Ions = atoms with a charge Opposite charges attract => bonding Ionic bonding

9 Figure 2.4 Figure 2.4

10 Covalent Bonds Can share electrons in outer shell -> covalent bonds
e.g. water, many organic compounds unequal sharing -> polar bond some partial charges on the molecule

11 Figure 2.5a

12 Figure 2.5b

13 Figure 2.5c

14 Figure 2.5d

15 Figure 2.5e

16 Chemical Reactions- Synthesis
Putting atoms together A + B => AB Eg. 2H2 + O2 => 2 H2O Synthesis in the body = Anabolism

17 Chemical Reactions- Decomposition
Splitting Molecules apart AB => A + B Eg. CH4 => C + 2H2 Decomposition in the body = Catabolism

18 Other Reactions Exchange reactions Reversible reactions
both decomposition & synthesis E. g. AB + CD => AD + BC Reversible reactions Go both directions E. g AB <=> A + B

19 Nature of Water Good solvent for some molecules
Dissolve = Hydrophilic molecules Don’t dissolve = Hydrophobic molecules Participates in chemical reactions Absorbs & releases heat slowly Needs large amount of heat to evaporate

20 Acid, Base & Salts Acid dissolves => H+ (1 or more)
Base dissolves => OH- ( 1 or more) Acid plus base react => salt E.g. HCL + KOH => KCL + H2O acid base salt

21 pH Concept The concentration of H+ or OH- expressed on the pH scale
0-14 At pH = 7.0: H+conc. = OH- conc. Less than 7.0 = more H+ (acid) The smaller the number, the more H+ More than 7.0 = more OH- (alkaline) The larger the number, the more OH-

22 Organic Compounds Carbohydrates Lipids Proteins Nucleic acids

23 Carbohydrates Simple sugars = Monosaccharide
Major one in body = glucose Disaccharides= 2- simple sugars bonded Formed by dehydration synthesis E.g. glucose + fructose => sucrose glucose + galactose => lactose Glucose + glucose => maltose

24 Figure 2.8

25 Polysacchharides Many sugars bonded in chains
Can have branching structures not usually soluble in water Glycogen- animal carbohydrate Polyglucose Starch- plant carbohydrate Cellulose- plant polymer Polyglucose but indigestible = fiber

26 Figure 2.9

27 Lipids Insoluble in water = hydrophobic Triglycerides Phospholipids
Cholesterol Steroids Fatty acids Fat soluble vitamins

28 Figure 2.10

29 Figure 2.11

30 Figure 2.12

31 Cholesterol Ring structures Used to make steroid hormones
Help make membranes stiff Made in liver

32 Proteins Structural elements in cells Chemical catalysts Hormones
Antibodies Polymers of amino acids

33 Amino Acid Amino group Carboxyl group Side chain
~20 different side chains A large variety of structures

34 Figure 2.13

35 Terminology Amino acids joined by peptide bond
2 = dipeptide, 3= tripeptide Many =polypeptide Functional polypeptide = protein Includes structure up to quaternary. Thus a protein may have 1 or more polypeptide chains

36 Enzymes Proteins serving as chemical catalysts Highly specific
Efficient May be controlled

37 Figure 2.14

38 Nucleic Acids Polymer of nucleotides => Phosphate
Sugar –pentose (ribose, deoxyribose) Base- 5 of them (4 per nucleic acid) Adenine (A), guanine (G), thymine (T), cytidine (C), uracil (U)

39 DNA Deoxyribose & A,T,G,C Bases pair: A-T & G-C
Two polymers hydrogen bonded together forms a double helix Stores genetic information on protein sequences.

40 Figure 2.15

41 RNA Ribose & A,U,G,C Single chain Functions in protein synthesis
Required to translate DNA to protein

42 ATP Specialized for energy transport in the cell
Carries energy in the chemical bond between phosphate groups.

43 Figure 2.16


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